Fugitive Snowden’s hopes of leaving airport dashed

STUCK IN TRANSIT:It was not clear why Snowden did not have the pass he was expected to be given to leave the transit area, while the US urged his extradition

Reuters, MOSCOW

Sheremetyevo Airport in Moscow, Russia, is pictured on Wednesday.

Photo: Rueters

Fugitive US spy agency contractor Edward Snowden’s hopes of leaving Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport for the first time in a month on Wednesday were dashed when he failed to secure permission from Russia to leave.

An airport source said Snowden, who is wanted by the US on espionage charges for revealing details of government intelligence programs, was handed documents by his lawyer that were expected to include a pass to leave the transit area.

However, Snowden did not go through passport control, and lawyer Anatoly Kucherena, who is helping him with his request for temporary asylum in Russia until he can reach a country that will shelter him, said the American did not have the pass he needed.

It was not clear whether there had been last-minute political intervention or a hitch, or whether the pass had never been in his possession.

Kucherena said he hoped Snowden’s status would be resolved soon.

“I must say he is of course anxious about it and I hope that this situation will be resolved in the nearest future,” Kucherena said at Sheremetyevo. “This is the first time Russia is facing such a situation, and this issue of course requires time for the immigration workers.”

In Washington, the White House said it was seeking clarification of Snowden’s status, the US State Department made clear that allowing him to leave the airport would be “deeply disappointing” and US Secretary of State John Kerry telephoned Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov about the situation.

“The secretary spoke with Foreign Minister Lavrov this morning,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said. “He reiterated our belief ... that Mr Snowden needs to be returned to the United States, where he will have a fair trial.”

Bolivia, Nicaragua and Venezuela have said they could offer sanctuary to Snowden, who arrived on June 23 from Hong Kong, where he had fled to escape capture and trial in the US on espionage charges.

None of the three Latin American countries can be reached by a direct commercial flight from Moscow, so Snowden has requested temporary asylum in Russia until he believes he can safely reach one of them.

The US wants him extradited to face prosecution and has revoked his passport.

Russia has refused to send him home and risks damage to its relations with the US if it grants him temporary asylum — a process that could take three months.

Kucherena confirmed Snowden was staying somewhere in the many corridors and rooms of the transit area between the runway and passport control — an area Russia considers neutral territory — and that he had learned the Russian for “Hi,” “Bye-bye” and “I’ll ring you.”

The 30-year-old had received calls from across Russia, with offers to give him money and a place to stay, and even a suggestion by one woman to adopt him. He said he had enough money to get by for now.

Kucherena said he had brought him fresh underwear and shirts and added that he had given him the novel Crime and Punishment by 19th-century writer Fyodor Dostoevsky and short stories by Anton Chekhov.